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Thread: 747 Project

  1. #1
    Senior Member N790SW's Avatar
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    747 Project

    Hey Guys

    I am going to be doing a project on the 747 which includes a speech, I do know alot about the 747 but since we are all into aviation here , can any of you give me some tips or what to mention when I infact do my speech on this great plane, some stuff to touch up opon too. Thanks Guys and I will let you know how it goes when I do my speech on this plane.
    -Bobby Catone

    ALL views, opinions expressed are mine ONLY and are NOT representative of those shared by Southwest Airlines Co.

  2. #2
    Senior Member Derf's Avatar
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    Re: 747 Project

    Quote Originally Posted by N790SW
    Hey Guys

    I am going to be doing a project on the 747 which includes a speech, I do know allot about the 747 but since we are all into aviation here , can any of you give me some tips or what to mention when I in fact do my speech on this great plane, some stuff to touch up opon too. Thanks Guys and I will let you know how it goes when I do my speech on this plane.
    You should have done it on the 727....it was more of a breakthrough.

    747, Tripple Decker, was designed as a freighter because it was believed that the Concorde would in a few years make the 747 a cargo only aircraft. Boeing bet the company on it and made sure that if the SST technology worked as planned and passengers would be Mach 1+, the 747 would better be the best for Cargo.

    The reason that there is a 2nd deck (3rd level) is so that the cockpit could be out of the way when cargo was loaded. The nose was designed to pivot up on the cargo versions so the payload was loaded directly in making turnaround much faster.

    If I were you, I would go to your library and get 3 good books on the 747, sit in a well lit place with some nice hot coco and you will be able to tell us more about 747 than most of the people on the forum. There is allot to know, it is all worth reading about, it is not the same as getting 9 good sound bytes by 4 forum members.

    If you want to paint the best airliners from Boeing....I would really look at a 727 for many more reasons. God, I could type for 10 minutes the firsts that the 727 made possible. But don't get me started with that bird!
    The three most common expressions in aviation are, "Why is it doing that?", "Where are we?" and "Oh Crap".

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    Re: 747 Project

    Quote Originally Posted by N790SW
    Hey Guys

    I am going to be doing a project on the 747 which includes a speech, I do know alot about the 747 but since we are all into aviation here , can any of you give me some tips or what to mention when I infact do my speech on this great plane, some stuff to touch up opon too. Thanks Guys and I will let you know how it goes when I do my speech on this plane.

    Topics to talk about:

    The first flight by the Wright brothers could have been flown inside the 747.

    *The 747 originally proposed for the military.

    *Was/is used to transport the Space Shuttle.

    * The 747 is used as a test bed for engines such as the 777 & is a test bed for the laser system.

    *The 747 has been used as the setting for quite of number of films:
    Speed, Snakes on a Plane, Air Force One, etc

    Need more information on the 747, go to the source:
    http://www.boeing.com/commercial/747fam ... round.html
    The problem with socialism is that you eventually,
    run out of other people’s money.
    ” - Margaret Thatcher

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    Senior Member Derf's Avatar
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    I have a question..
    100,200,300,400,800.....why are they skipping 500,600 and 700?
    The three most common expressions in aviation are, "Why is it doing that?", "Where are we?" and "Oh Crap".

  5. #5
    Administrator PhilDernerJr's Avatar
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    Oh, oh, oh! I know! It's because "8" is considered alucky number byt he Chinese, and Boeing wanted it to have appeal among the Asian community. Airbus did the same thing with their first version ofthe A380.
    Email me anytime at [email protected].

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Derf
    I have a question..
    100,200,300,400,800.....why are they skipping 500,600 and 700?
    500,600,700 were various 747 projects that never got off the ground.. Using the 800 was Boeing's way of starting fresh, & as Phil said, to gain the attention of Asian customers....
    The problem with socialism is that you eventually,
    run out of other people’s money.
    ” - Margaret Thatcher

  7. #7
    Senior Member Derf's Avatar
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    used numbers....how boring, Thanks for the info Mike!

    as per the 747 facts...
    "THE 747sp is BAD A$$" This is a fact!
    The three most common expressions in aviation are, "Why is it doing that?", "Where are we?" and "Oh Crap".

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    Quote Originally Posted by Midnight Mike
    The 747 is used as a test bed for engines such as the 777
    You could show this 26 second video: BZW0zA1r6bE
    I'm learning to fly, around the clouds. But what goes up must come down. - Tom Petty

  9. #9
    Senior Member hiss srq's Avatar
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    I agree with Fred the 727 is much cooler. Spiral stairways pfft! How about a wing that takes itself apart in flight and actually makes it fly better! How about you can land that bad boy on a 4,000 foot runway and still have some room left over before you become a giant lawnmower.
    Southwest Airlines-"Once it pop's it's time to stop" Southwest Airlines-"Our Shamu's are almost real" Southwest Airlines -"We blow our top real easy" Southwest Airlines- "You can't top us..... really"

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    Senior Member FlyingColors's Avatar
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    Re: 747 Project

    Quote Originally Posted by Derf
    Quote Originally Posted by N790SW
    Hey Guys

    I am going to be doing a project on the 747 which includes a speech, I do know allot about the 747 but since we are all into aviation here , can any of you give me some tips or what to mention when I in fact do my speech on this great plane, some stuff to touch up opon too. Thanks Guys and I will let you know how it goes when I do my speech on this plane.
    You should have done it on the 727....it was more of a breakthrough.

    747, Tripple Decker, was designed as a freighter because it was believed that the Concorde would in a few years make the 747 a cargo only aircraft. Boeing bet the company on it and made sure that if the SST technology worked as planned and passengers would be Mach 1+, the 747 would better be the best for Cargo.

    !
    The Boeing SST 2707 was the passenger plane of the future, bigger and faster then the Concorde .
    "my finger on the shutter button, while my eye is over my shoulder"

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by uplander
    Quote Originally Posted by Midnight Mike
    The 747 is used as a test bed for engines such as the 777
    You could show this 26 second video: BZW0zA1r6bE
    Nice find!!! I saw the airplane when I went to Victorville Airport, pretty neat to see the 777 engine on the 747, it hangs very low.
    The problem with socialism is that you eventually,
    run out of other people’s money.
    ” - Margaret Thatcher

  12. #12
    Senior Member Derf's Avatar
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    Some 727 Firsts!!!

    First certificated commercial trijet (December 1963).
    First "Quick Change" airplane, operated with passenger configuration during day and converted to all-cargo at night.
    First to bring the speed and comfort of jet travel to hundreds of communities with short runways -- as short as 5,000 feet.
    First commercial airplane in history to surpass the 1,000-sales mark for civil use.
    First standard airliner to be fitted with Boeing "widebody look" passenger cabin interior.
    First airplane to have a triple-slotted flap system for superior takeoff and landing performance.
    First Boeing jetliner with completely powered flight controls. All flight controls are hydraulically powered, with dual units, except for the horizontal stabilizer, which is trimmed electrically.
    First trijet to fly the North Atlantic with passengers, carrying charter loads between Canadian and European cities.
    First commercial airplane to win a medal of honor from a king for surviving a fighter strafing attack (Morocco, 1972).
    Pratt & Whitney designed the JT8D turbofan engine specifically for the 727, the first time in commercial aviation that a jet engine was "tailor-made" for an airplane.
    First airplane to use the "jet mixing" principle for quieter operation. Because the engine had the lowest jet exit velocity of any engine when it was introduced, it also had the lowest noise level from the tailpipe.
    First airplane to be certificated to FAA noise rules (FAR 36), even though Boeing was not required to do so because the airplane was in service years before the rule was written.
    First large commercial airplane to carry its own built-in airstairs and auxiliary power unit and to feature single-point refueling for total independence of ground support equipment at through stops.
    First airplane to be subjected to The Boeing Company's brutal fatigue testing and static airframe testing prior to flight. The $30 million test program was designed to ensure that no redesign of production airplanes would be necessary. During fatigue testing, the airframe demonstrated a useful life of more than 20 years of normal service.
    First jet airliner certified by the FAA for operation from gravel runways.
    First jet airplane considered quiet enough to use LaGuardia Airport in New York City. Two U.S. trunk operators began service June 1, 1964, from LaGuardia, both using 727s.
    First jetliner to prove it could operate -- even with one engine out -- from Bogata, Colombia (8,355-foot elevation), Cuzco, Peru (10,800-foot elevation), and LaPaz, Bolivia (13,358-foot elevation). No jet had operated at any of these airports before.
    First in range of all the "smaller" airliners. In 1973, an Advanced 727-200 flew nonstop from Toronto, Canada, to Copenhagen, Denmark -- a distance of 3,975 statute miles.
    The three most common expressions in aviation are, "Why is it doing that?", "Where are we?" and "Oh Crap".

  13. #13
    Senior Member N790SW's Avatar
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    Well folks:

    I did my project today and lets just put it this way it was the best in the class and i got a 100 on the whole thing =] thanks for your help - I even put in a picture of a WN 747 - i think Alex Trude would be proud of me for that one =P thanks for all your help agian =]
    -Bobby Catone

    ALL views, opinions expressed are mine ONLY and are NOT representative of those shared by Southwest Airlines Co.

  14. #14
    Administrator PhilDernerJr's Avatar
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    Glad you did so well, all without using one period or comma. Congrats!
    Email me anytime at [email protected].

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    Again, I echo Phil, congrats! I think it is even more amazing that you didn't use any periods or commas like Phil said! Congrats on that too! ;)
    nwa FOREVER!

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